A Fire Bell in the Night for the West?

by Michael Scheuer

"It [the Koran] is the great visceral connector that makes all Muslims
feel that there is a community between them. … For Muslims, dissing the Koran
is the hot button of all hot buttons."
- Lee Harris, May 12, 20051

One need not be a Pollyanna to find a bright spot
in an otherwise negative experience. A case in point is the violence and demonstrations
that erupted across the Muslim world after Newsweek's May 9 article claiming
copies of the Koran were deliberately desecrated by U.S. soldiers at Guantanamo
Bay. In Afghanistan, 16 people were killed and more than 100 wounded in four
days of demonstrations, and protests occurred in Yemen, Pakistan, Indonesia,
the Gaza Strip, and elsewhere. Newsweek has since retracted its article
and expressed sympathy for those killed in the violence the article sparked.
But as the major Pakistani daily Dawn said on its editorial page, the
disclaimer comes too late, "the damage has been done."2

While the violence over the Koran-desecration story may or may not continue,
it is important not to hastily cross off the incident as an ephemeral issue.
It is even more important to avoid attributing the reaction to al-Qaeda's cynical
manipulation of the crowds, or knee-jerk anti-U.S. bashing by anti-Western Muslim
governments. Instead, the Newsweek article provides a timely opportunity
to test the two main Western assumptions that undergird strategy for the War
on Terrorism: (a) barbarism not faith motivates Islamist terrorists, Islamic
militancy, and anti-U.S. Muslims, a group small in number and on the fringe
of Muslim society, and (b) America and the West are hated for what they are
and not for what they do.

The Reaction I: Motivated by Barbarism or Faith?

Popular reaction to the Newsweek story
shows the extent to which the everyday lives of Muslims is dominated by their
faith. Demonstrations occurred spontaneously around the world, showing the immediate
and powerful impact a perceived slight to an Islamic sanctity has among ordinary
people. Granted that this is the fourth instance in which Muslims believe their
sanctities have been profaned; they already consider the three holiest places
in Islam – the Arabian Peninsula, Iraq, and Jerusalem – to be occupied by infidels.
It may be true, therefore, that Muslim nerves were rubbed raw before the Koran
controversy, and that previous irritation sharpened the reaction to it. Nonetheless,
the intensity and extent of the popular reaction suggests that it would be incorrect
to assume that only those who support Islamist leaders like Osama bin Laden
viewed the episode as an attack on the Islamic faith. Troublingly, it also highlights
the Muslim world's readiness to take at face value, and without reflection,
accusations of intentional U.S. and Western offenses against Islam. The desecration
was not a surprise, one protester in Gaza told the media, because "The Holy
Koran was defiled by the dirtiest of hands, the hands of the Americans."3

Beyond the negative reaction of the so-called "Arab street," the reported desecration
of the Koran immediately became a top-priority issue for Islamic, secular, and
dictatorial Muslim governments. Pakistani President Musharraf called for a "thorough
investigation," and his regime dismissed as "inadequate" Newsweek's retraction;4
Qatar's state-run al-Watan called the episode "an unusual crime … showing the
depth of hatred inside some Americans for Islam;"5
official Syrian television described the incident as a "horrible crime … [that]
went beyond aggression on humans and touched the essence of the Islamic faith;"6
Prime Minister Badawi of Malaysia called the episode "very saddening" and assessed
that it was "meant to humiliate Muslims" – the latter, of course, a theme prominent
in bin Laden's writings;7
and the Saudi regime expressed "deep indignation" over the issue and urged "deterrent
measures should be taken against the perpetrators."8
In addition, the Organization of the Islamic Conference, representing 57 Muslim
states, denounced the incident; the Gulf Cooperation Council called for the
"harshest punishment;" and Iran's foreign ministry said the incident showed
"a hostile tendency in the United States toward Islam."9

The purported desecration also earned attacks from some of the world's most
senior Islamic religious leaders. In Egypt, the Grand Mufti Dr. Ali Gomma termed
the incident an "unforgivable crime" in the face of which Muslims cannot stand
with "hands folded," while the sheik of al-Azhar University, Mohamed Sayed Tantawi,
said, "The Quran's desecration is a great crime and should be dealt with at
once."10
This reaction also bridged Islam's Sunni-Shia divide. The Sunni grand mufti
of Lebanon, Muhammed Rashid Qabbani, for example, described the event as a "crime"
and called for an investigation by a multinational committee with Muslim state
members, while Lebanese Shia leader Sheik Mohamed Hussein Fadlallah called the
reported desecration as "part of an American program – of contempt for Islam,"
and "one of the American methods of torture" used against Muslims.11

The Reaction II: Prompted by What the West Is or What It
Does?

The outpouring of protest and violence after the
Newsweek report also suggests that U.S. and Western actions vis-à-vis
the Islamic world are watched closely, and with a mindset now conditioned to
believe Muslims and their faith are under attack by the West. To date, not one
of the major Islamist militant leaders – bin Laden, Zarqawi, Zawahiri, Abu Bakr
Bashir, et al. – has said a public word about the desecration incident, and
yet worldwide demonstrations have occurred and the air has been filled with
harsh condemnations from government and religious leaders.

This reality suggests that when bin Laden repeatedly claims that Islam's war
with the United States and the West is based on what they have done and are
doing in the Muslim world – and not by the mere existence of their societies
and freedoms – he is speaking not only for himself and other militants but for
a very broad swath of the world's Muslims. This does not mean that all of those
Muslims will pick up guns to defend their faith. It does suggest, however, that
the West may be whistling past the graveyard when it concludes that bin Laden's
followers are nihilists and that their views are shared only by the Muslims'
world lunatic fringe.

Conclusion

Before attributing the Koran controversy solely
to a poorly sourced magazine article and the ability of al-Qaeda and other groups
to cynically exploit it, the West would do well to draw a lesson from the episode
that would help formulate better plans to cope with and defeat Sunni militancy.
That lesson is simply to conclude that a substantial number of the West's opponents
in the War on Terrorism are motivated by faith, and that they find U.S. and
Western actions – especially those that seem to target Islamic sanctities –
overwhelmingly more offensive and humiliating than the norms and lifestyles
of Western societies.

Objectively, the negative reaction of Muslims at all societal levels to the
Newsweek story, and their reluctance to credit the magazine's retraction,
should not have been a surprise in the West – and yet there is every indication
of Western shock. This reaction can only be explained by the West's stubborn
and widespread belief that Muslims have no legitimate complaints about Western
actions. The Sunni mufti of Lebanon put this reality concisely during the Koran
controversy, suggesting that such self-delusion is a recipe for the West's ultimate
defeat. "Every day," Sheik Qabbani said, "the United States commits new follies
that deepen the hatred of the Islamic world toward it, and still Americans officials
say 'why do they hate us?"12